more specifically, the claim is that engineers at kaspersky labs were directed to reverse engineer competing products and use that knowledge to alter legitimate system files by inserting malicious looking code into them so that they would both seem like files that should be detected and be similar enough to the original file that the competing product will also act on the legitimate file and in so doing cause problems for users of those competing products.

i've heard this described as fake malware, but for the life of me i can't see why it should be called fake. the altered files may not do anything malicious when executed, but they're clearly designed to exploit those competing products. furthermore, there is clearly a damaging payload. this isn't fake malware, it's real malware. it may launch it's malicious payload in an unorthodox and admittedly indirect manner, but this is essentially an exploit.

some consider the detection of these altered files to be false positives because the files don't actually do anything themselves, but since they have malicious intent and indirectly harmful consequences, i think the only real false positives in play here are the original system files that are being mistaken for these modified files.

by all accounts, this type of attack on anti-malware products actually happened. what's new here is the claim that kaspersky labs was responsible at the direction of eugene kaspersky himself. there's a lot of room for doubt. the only data we have to go by so far, besides the historical fact of the attack's existence, is the word of anonymous sources (who potentially have an ax to grind) and some emails that, quite frankly, are easily forged. circumstantially there's also an experiment kaspersky participated in around the same time frame that has similar earmarks to what is being claimed except for the part about tricking competing products into detecting legitimate files as malware.

i don't expect we'll ever know for sure if kaspersky was behind the attacks. doubts have been expressed by members of the industry, but frankly i've seen too many things whitewashed or completely ignored (like partnerships with government malware writers) to take their publicly expressed statements at face value. there are certainly vendors i'd have a harder time believing capable of this but there just doesn't seem to be sufficient evidence that the claims are true. the problem is that i can't imagine any kind of evidence the anonymous sources are likely to have that isn't easy to repudiate. had they taken a stand at the time (like someone with actual scruples would have done) they would have been able to put their names behind their claims - they may have lost their jobs but they surely would have been able to find employment with a different vendor because hiring a whistle-blower would have been good PR.

however, as it stands now, the anonymous sources have to remain anonymous. if they're telling the truth then they are complicit in kaspersky's wrong-doing, and if they're lying they are throwing the entire industry under the bus for no good reason (because this claim fans the fires of that old conspiracy theory about AV vendors being the ones who write the viruses). Either way, to have this claim linked to their real identities now would make them radioactive in the industry. no one would touch them, and for good reason.

long ago it used to be that the industry only employed the highest calibre of researchers. people who were beyond reproach. naturally, in order to grow, the industry has had to hire ever increasing numbers of people and old safeguards against undesirable individuals joining the ranks don't scale very well. increasingly people who aren't beyond reproach are being found amongst the industry's ranks and there appears to be no scenario where these two anonymous sources don't fall into that category. the inclusivity that the general security community embraces (and that the anti-malware industry is increasingly mimicking) has the consequence that blackhats are included. the anti-malware industry is going to have to either figure out if they're ok with that or figure out a way to avoid what the general security community could not.